In Past Show

Surrounding the pupil in the centre, the flowers of this piece gush into a tonal sea of colour. Like the individual paintbrush marks in an Impressionist painting, these colourful pieces submerge the viewer in sensory effects. In contrast, the oil poured resin is pure jet-black. A cosmic void, origin of colour or gaping orifice, the polished surface displays reflects as troubling as fascinating.

About Joe Black

Joe Black’s work is the vanguard of the current Pop Art movement. He describes his works as “revealing the unexpected” as they are viewed both from a distance and up close to make the ordinary extraordinary. Black combines his natural craft skills with a love of materials - many of which are recognizable everyday objects - to create portraits and abstract works. Using a laborious technique of hand painting and altering each tiny object to give gentle lines and shading to his subjects, Black has pioneered an elaborate new form of pixilation that he uses to hide subtle implications within each of his images. This is perhaps best illustrated by his use of 5,500 plastic toy soldiers in his depiction of Robert Capa’s iconic boy soldier piece Made in China (2011).